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NEW 2 disk 2006-2007 DVD of the Marxists Internet Archive.
Please click here for further information. See Also: Daily list of files updated
September 30, 2007: The Dutch LanguageSection has added 28 documents:
Guy Desolre
Victor Serge, Leon Trotski en Henk Sneevliet en de Vierde Internationale (1936-1940) — 1997
Leon Trotski
De enige weg — 1932
Levensbeschrijving van Lenin — 1930
Genationaliseerde industrie en arbeidersbeheer — 1938
Over optimisme en pessimisme — 1901
Een historisch document — 1937
Het tragisch lot van het Duitse proletariaat — 1933
Perspectieven van het Amerikaanse marxisme — 1932
Nationalisme en economie — 1934
Een centristische aanval op het marxisme — 1934
Anatol Wassiljewitsj Loenatsjarski — 1934
Verklaring der delegatie van de bolsjewiki-leninisten op de conferentie der links-socialistische en communistische organisaties — 1934
Antwoord op de vragen van de Heer Simenon, vertegenwoordiger van Paris-Soir — 1933
Problemen van het Sovjetregime — 1933
Gesprek met een sociaaldemocratische arbeider — 1933
Geen woorden maar daden — 1932
Een voorstander neemt stelling in de Franse discussie — 1934
Paul Verbraeken
Het agrarisch probleem in de Vietnamese revolutie — 1973
Henk Sneevliet
Voor de Vierde Internationale - De groei van de gedachte — 1938
Jan Cap
In naam van mijn klasse — 1987
Ernest Mandel
De Belgische nijverheid in de Gemeenschappelijke Markt — 1960
Fascisme — Wat het is en hoe je het moet tegenhouden — 1992
Hulde aan René Groslambert (1901-1987) — 1987
1934-1936: de grote draai — 1986
De olieprijs daalt, de economische depressie blijft — 1986
Goelag archipel — 1974
Lessen uit Mei ’68 — 1968
In heel de wereld zal ‘Che’ Guevara miljoenen militanten tot voorbeeld zijn — 1967
[Karel ten Haaf, Fréderic Lehembre, Valeer Vantyghem, David Baele, Rick Denkers, Adrien Verlee]
28 September 2007:Added to the Portuguese Temática Archive:
A Questão da Palestina wrote by L. Vatolina;
Existencialismo Uma Corrente em Moda da Filosofia Burguesa wrote by G. Gak;
Para Compreender Melhor a Grécia Democrática wrote by Foula Porphirogenis and Serafim Maximus;
O Que Representa "Problemas" Para Elevar o Nosso Nível Ideológico wrote by Dalcídio Jurandir and
Figuras do Movimento Operário A Vida do Bolchevique Sérgio Kirov wrote by B. P. Pozen and
Sois a Favor ou Contra a União Soviética? wrote by O. Kuusinen
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
27 September 2007:Added to the Romanian Archive:
N. S. Karjanski. V. I. Lenin la Congresul al V-lea al partidului
[Thanks to Liviu Iacob]
26 September 2007: Added to the Nikolai Bukharin Archive:
Soviets or Parliament
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
26 September, 2007: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the following 15 original documents from the history of early American Marxism:
“A Short History of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen,” by F.P. Sargent [1889] Brief history of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen by the head of the organization, F.P. Sargent. The BLF is best remembered as the organization for which Eugene V. Debs edited the monthly journal, the Locomotive Firemen’s Magazine, from 1878 to 1894, when he left to form an industrial union, the American Railway Union.
“The Russian Gay-Girls and the War,” by Louise Bryant [July 1918] This article from Pearson’s Magazine by Left Wing journalist Louise Bryant mixes autobiography with analysis in considering the issue of prostitution during the period of the Great War in Europe.
“Resolution Passed by the 3rd Congress of the Ukrainian Federation of the Socialist Party of America: New York, NY—April 1919.” This unanimous resolution of the April 1919 convention of the Ukrainian Federation of the Socialist Party proclaims that the Federation has “denounced in the past, we denounce now, and shall continue to denounce in the future, all groups and all parties which defend the old and corrupt social order.
“America: The Foundation of a Communist Party,” by “Y.”[Sept. 1, 1919] This article from the Petrograd magazine The Communist International speaks of the formation of a Communist Party of America as an accomplished fact—in an issue with the same publication date as the opening of the founding convention of the Communist Party of America!
“Some Plain Words,” by Charles W. Ervin [Sept. 10, 1921] Managing Editor of the New York Call Charles Ervin fires a broadside in the direction of the Communist Party’s Friends of Soviet Russia organization, appealing for funds for Russian famine relief, to be collected and distributed outside of the FSR apparatus.
“The ‘Legal’ Communists: Letter to the Editor of the New York Call,” by Adolph Germer [Sept. 11, 1921] The former Executive Secretary of the Socialist Party and current assistant to Greater New York Secretary Julius Gerber, Adolph Germer, writes this letter in support of Charles Ervin’s editorial of the previous day attacking the Friends of Soviet Russia.
“W.Z. Foster, Back from Europe, Pins Faith on Economic Action: Labor Man Slips Quietly Into US After Months in Russia, Italy, Germany, France, England—Confident of Soviets’ Success and Leadership of ACW Here.” (NY Call) [Sept. 15, 1921] This article from the pages of the Socialist Party’s New York Call documents the return of William Z. Foster from his extended tour of Russia, Germany, Italy, England, and France on behalf of the Federated Press.
“Gale to Squeal Way to Liberty, Inquiry Shows: Renegade Radical to Give State’s Evidence to Escape Penalty for Evading the Draft.” (NY Call) [Sept. 17, 1921] This article from the New York Call notes the transformation of draft resister and radical publisher Linn Gale from “a rabid Communist to a prisoner willing to incriminate other radicals, betraying their confidences.”
“The Detroit Resolution,” by James Oneal [Sept. 19, 1921] Socialist Party NEC member James Oneal offers his perspective on the decision of the June 1921 Detroit Convention to survey the field with a view to eventual work with other radical organizations in an umbrella organization patterned after the British Labour Party. Oneal states that the NEC had followed the instructions of the convention and dispatched a survey to likely political partners.
“For a Mass Movement,” by Adolph Dreifuss [Sept. 22, 1921] This article by the leader of the Socialist Party’s German Federation, Adolph Dreifuss, speaks to the hot issue in party ranks—the move towards organized cooperation with other Left Wing organizations in an American version of the British Labour Party.
“Rand School is Voted to Be SP Auxiliary: Controlling Society, 38 to 20, Fixes Its Stand—Six Directors Resign from Board.” (NY Call) [event of Sept. 23, 1921] On Sept. 23, 1921, at the start of the academic year, the membership of the American Socialist Society met and, after lengthy and heated debate, adopted a resolution declaring the Rand School of Social Science to be a Socialist Party institution and determined that “the teachers of history, economics, political science, and related subjects, therefore, ought to be in the main either members of or avowed sympathizers with the Socialist Party.”
“Communists Try to Disrupt Socialist Rally: Create Uproar at Brownsville Labor Lyceum During Address by London—Disturbers are Ejected...: Incident Stimulates Enthusiasm of Workers for Socialist Message...” (NY Call) [event of Sept. 23, 1921] On Sept. 23, 1921, Socialist Congressman Meyer London spoke on behalf of his party before a crowd of 1,500 at an electoral rally held in Brownsville, NY.
“Torchbearers,” by Moritz J. Loeb [Nov. 1924] This article from the WPA’s Workers Monthly marks the first anniversary of The Daily Worker, said to have been started through the “collection”of less than $75,000 of a $100,000 target. The party had used the funds to purchase a printing plant in Chicago, used to produce not only its English daily and the monthly magazine, but also the Italian daily, The Young Worker, The Young Comrade, and the various pamphlets and leaflets issued by the organization.
“Two Weeks by Train: The Diary of a Canadian Visitor to Soviet Russia and the Soviet Ukraine,” by Phil Malkin [May 3-18, 1931] This 20 page journal represents a modest contribution to the vast literature of English-language visitor’s memoirs on Russia and the Soviet Union (see Nerhood’s bibliography: To Russia and Return.)
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
26 September 2007: Added to the new archive of The Pierre Goldman Affair 1969-1979:
Interview With Alter Goldman by Wladimir Rabi, from Les Temps Modernes, #353, Dec 1976
26 September 2007: Added to the new archive of French Revolution Archive:
Epistle to the Ministers of all Religions, Sylvain Maréchal, 1801
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
22 September 2007: Added to the T. A. Jackson Archive:
The British Empire (March 1922)
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
22 September 2007:Added to the Portuguese Marighella Archive:
Nossa Política, Editorial da Revista Problemas nº 14, 1948
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
21 September 2007:Added to the Portuguese Prestes Archive:
A Luta Contra a Guerra e o Imperialismo Exige Uma Vanguarda Combativa e Esclarecida , 1948
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
21 September 2007: Added to the Zhou Enlai Internet Archive:
Communist Co-Operation by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (July 15, 1937)
[Thanks to Mike B.]
20 September 2007: Added to the Mihailo Marković Archive:
New Forms of Democracy in Socialism, April 1981
Tragedy of National Conflicts in “Real Socialism.” The case of Kosovo, 1989
[Thanks to Andy Blunden]
19 September 2007: Added to the Mihailo Marković Archive:
Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights, 1981
[Thanks to Andy Blunden]
18 September 2007:Added to the Portuguese Leontiev Archive:
A Luta Entre o Novo e o Velho
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
17 September 2007: Added to the
Serbo-Croatian Praxis
Archive:
Mihajlo
Ðurić - Dvosmislenost utopije (The Ambiguity of Utopia)
[Thanks to A.M.]
17 September 2007:Added to the
Marx and Engels Works (Arabic Section):
The Part Played by Labor in the Transition From Ape to Man
[Thanks to Sam Berner]
17 September 2007:
Added to the Portuguese Ramos Archive:
Contra as Privatizações, o Monetarismo e a Economia de Mercado, 1985
[Thanks to Gabriel Zerbetto Vera and Fernando Araújo]
17 September 2007: Added to
the
Thomas Bell Archive:
The Movement for World Trade Union Unity (December 1925). Pamphlet by the Political Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain, Thomas Bell, that assesses conditions in the international labour movement, particularly in the U.S.A. and Britain; the need for international trade union unity; and the importance of the Red International of Labour Unions (Profintern).
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
16 September 2007: Added to the Hal Draper Archive:
Marxist Women versus Bourgeois Feminism (1976) (co-authored with Ann G. Lipow) (Study of the attitude taken towards bourgeois feminism by the early Marxist movement, particularly in Germany and Austria – with extracts from writings by August Bebel, Clara Zetkin, Rosa Luxemburg, Eleanor Marx and Louise Kautsky)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]
16 September 2007: Added to the Ernest Mandel Archive:
After Imperialism? (1962) (review article about an important study of imperialism by Michael Barratt Brown)
The Social, Economic and Political Background to the Czechoslovak Crisis (1969)
World Monetary Crisis (1982)
[Thanks to Joseph Auciello]
16 September 2007: Added to the Daniel DeLeon Internet Archive are the following 28 documents, rounding out his writings for all of 1904:
1904,
December 3— The Meaning of Corregan's Victory
1904, December 4— Uneasy Lies the Head of the Evil-Doer
1904, December 5— “The Passing of Peabody”
1904, December 6— On the Way to Find Out
1904, December 7— Are They Donkeys, or Felons?
1904, December 8— Our Zemstvos
1904, December 9— What They Come To
1904, December 10— Good or Evil Genius?
1904, December 11— Innocents at Home
1904, December 12— Home and Family
1904, December 13— Organize!
1904, December 14— A Modern Cagliostro
1904, December 15— Supplementals
1904, December 16— Chickens Coming Home to Roost
1904, December 18— Keller and Cunningham's Chance
1904, December 19— “Knock Out Drops” for Labor
1904, December 20— Mr. Hunter's Story
1904, December 21— And These Are “Picked”
1904, December 22— Two Letters
1904, December 23— At the Threshold of Great Social Changes
1904, December 24— Lawson's Revelations
1904, December 25— For the Socialist Christmas Tree
1904, December 26— Gifts—Christmas and Otherwise
1904, December 26— The Railroads and the Workers
1904, December 28— Arson and Dearth Capitalist Props
1904, December 29— Stone-Blind of One Eye
1904, December 30— Chilling at Its Heart
1904, December 31— “Intolerance,” “Bossism,” Etc.
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of the United States]
16 September 2007: Added to the Eugene V. Debs Internet Archive are the following 12 documents:
Open Letter to President Roosevelt (1906)
Roosevelt and His Regime (1907)
Unity and Victory (1908)
Susan B. Anthony: A Reminiscence (1909)
Political Appeal to American Workers (1912)
Capitalism and Socialism (1912)
A Message to the Children (1912)
The Fight for Freedom (1914)
The Old Umbrella Mender (1913)
The Coppock Brothers: Heroes of Harper’s Ferry (1914)
Industrial and Social Democracy (1915)
Louis Tikas: Ludlow’s Hero and Martyr (1915)
Social Reform (1916)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]
16 September 2007: Opened Jorge Enea Spilimbergo in the Portuguese-language section, with::
Lula: do Operariado à Direção Nacional, 2002
[Thanks to Gabriel Zerbetto Vera and Fernando Araújo]
16 September 2007: Added to
the
Communist Party of Great Britain Archive:
Twenty-Fifth Congress Report, (April 19-22, 1957). Reports from the XXV Congress of the Communist Party of Great Britain, the first Party Congress following Khrushchev’s revelations at the XX Congress of the C.P.S.U. The reports evaluate the C.P.G.B.’s programme, The British Road to Socialism; explain the proper application of Democratic Centralism; appraise Stalin; and defend the Russian invasion of Hungary.
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
16 September, 2007: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the following 20 original documents from the history of early American Marxism:
Claude MacKay Describes His Own Life: A Negro Poet, by Claude MacKay [Sept. 1918] Jamaican-born black American poet Claude MacKay offers this brief autobiography to the readers of Pearson's Magazine, detailing his origins and his journey to America. The grandson of slaves and son of a free-born agrarian, MacKay was raised by an older brother, a teacher, who instilled a love of classical literature in him at a young age.
The 'Reds' in Congress: Preliminary Report of the 1st World Congress of the Red International of Trade and Industrial Unions, by J.T. Murphy [events of July 3-19, 1921] Full text of a pamphlet published in England by delegate to founding convention of the Profintern J.T. Murphy.
The Strength of American Socialism, by James Oneal [Aug. 7, 1921] New York party leader James Oneal attempts to make the case that "the comparatively small increase of the Socialist vote cast in 1920" is in no way indicative of a decline in the prestige, power, and organization of the Socialist Party.
Is Hoover Bringing Russia Food or Reaction? by A.C. Freeman [Aug. 7, 1921] This article in the weekly magazine section of the New York Call questions Herbert Hoover's recent announcement that the American Relief Administration would begin work feeding starving children in Soviet Russia.
Legion Mob Kidnaps Mrs. Hazlett in Iowa: Banker's Son, Who is Local Commander, Leads Gang That Seizes Socialist Speaker, and Drives Her 20 Miles in Country and Back -- Mayor Refuses Protection. (NY Call) [event of Aug. 11, 1921] News account briefly detailing the kidnapping of Socialist Party organizer Ida Crouch Hazlett by a car full of ultra-nationalist American Legion thugs when the party founder was attempting to speak in the little town of Shenandoah, Iowa.
Volkszeitung Recovers Its Mailing Rights: Hays, in Announcing Restoration of Paper's Status, Declares Post Office Censorship is Gone...: All Papers Carried in Mails at All are Entitled to Second-Class Rights, is Postmaster's View, by Laurence Todd [event of Aug. 14, 1921] With the coming to power of the Warren Harding administration, the draconian anti-libertarian policies of the Wilson regime came under new scrutiny.
Mrs. Hazlett to Sue Ringleader of Legion Mob: $20,000 Damage Action to Be Brought Against Son of Banker Who Kidnapped Her. (NY Call) [event of Aug. 16, 1921] Having received no satisfaction with the partisan application of criminal law in the small town of Shenandoah, Iowa, Socialist Party organizer Ida Crouch Hazlett took her kidnapping by American Legion thugs to civil court for remedy, announcing that a $20,000 lawsuit was being launched against the ringleader of the crime for having violated her civil rights.
W.J. Burns Named Director of Federal Secret Service: Will Head All US Detective Agencies Under Reorganization -- Flynn Has Not Yet Resigned - Successor Was First Sleuth to Carve Career From Class Struggle. (NY Call) [event of Aug. 18, 1921] This news account in the Socialist Party daily, the New York Call, announces the appointment of veteran labor spy and detective agency chief William J. Burns as Director of the Department of Justice's Bureau of Investigation, forerunner of the FBI. Burns, who was replacing William J.
Jewish Group in Party Will Convene Today: Federation, 500 Weak Now, Thought Certain to be Destroyed, No Matter What Action is Taken: Once Numbered 5,000: Organized as Autonomous Body in 1912, Its Officials Have Fought Party Since Albany Trial. (NY Call) [Sept. 3, 1921] From Sept. 3-5, 1921, a special convention of the Jewish Socialist Federation was held to decide the question of that organization's future affiliation with the Socialist Party of America.
Jewish Group Seats Enemies of Party Unity: Loyal Delegates Beaten in Every Fight Against Executive Committee -- Move for Split: Kahn Flays Bolters: Some Leaders Charged at Opening of Federation Congress with Being Supporters of World War. (NY Call) [Sept. 4, 1921] This is the 2nd of 4 reports in the Socialist Party's New York daily detailing the proceedings of the JSF special convention, called to determine the JSF's future relationship to the Socialist Party of America.
Loyal Jewish Socialists Quit Seceding Body: Federation Convention Votes, 41 to 34, to Leave Party -- New Group is Immediately Organized...: Bigger and More Active Movement Promised by Those Who Refuse to Bolt Organization. (NY Call) [Sept. 5, 1921] This is the 3rd of 4 reports in the Socialist Party's New York daily detailing the proceedings of the JSF special convention, called to determine the JSF's future relationship to the Socialist Party of America. This installment notes the result of the final vote on affiliation after 6 hours of debate on Sept. 4, won by the withdrawal forces over the SP loyalists, 41 to 34.
New Alliance is Created by Jewish Group: Loyal Socialists Organize in Opposition to Seceding Federation with Endorsement of Labor Unions...: United Hebrew Trades Secretary Assures Delegates of Support in Movement for Strong Party. (NY Call) [Sept. 6, 1921]
Working Class Political Unity, by Morris Hillquit [Sept. 7, 1921] This article in the New York Call by the Socialist Party's most respected strategist, Morris Hillquit, delves into the shift of the Socialist Party towards cooperation with progressive elements from outside the party, a marked departure from the party's historical orientation against "fusion" with external elements.
Can We Work for Socialism Outside the Socialist Party? by William M. Feigenbaum [Sept. 9, 1921] In this article published in the Socialist Party's New York daily, journals William Feigenbaum -- son of one of the fathers of the Yiddish language Federation of the SPA -- takes aim at the Communists for disrupting the cause of Socialism in America, exemplified by their behavior at the recently completed special convention of the Jewish Socialist Federation.
Cahan Says the Forward Supports the Party: Editor of Great Jewish Daily, Back from Europe, Declares Seceders Will be Fought -- Praises Germans and Scores Communists Abroad, by William M. Feigenbaum [Sept. 11, 1921] On Sept. 11, 1921, the powerful and widely respected editor of the Jewish Daily Forward, Abraham Cahan, returned to America after a 14 week stay in Europe, centered in Berlin.
The Principles and Program of the Trade Union Educational League, by William Z. Foster [March 1922] This early leaflet of the Trade Union Educational League reprints an article by the group's founder, William Z. Foster, on the thinking behind the organization.
The Crisis on the Railroads, by William Z. Foster [June 17, 1922] With TUEL funded for 1922 to the tune of $5,000 by the Comintern via the Communist Party of America, this typeset news release was produced for the Trade Union Educational League by the Workers Party Press Service.
Manifesto of the United Toilers of America to the Miners, Marine, & Transport Workers of the World. [Aug. 5, 1922] In the 17th week of the bitter strike of the coal miners, the "legal political organization" of the Central Caucus-CPA Opposition issued this manifesto calling for workers in the marine and transport industries to expand the strike to prevent defeat of the miners' action.
Letter to Theodore Draper in New York City from Max Bedacht in Frenchtown, NJ, Dec. 13, 1954. This letter to historian Ted Draper from Communist Labor Party founding member Max Bedacht serves as a reminder of the limitations inherent in oral history and memoirs produced decades after the fact vs. careful examination of archival documents and the contemporary press
Letter to Theodore Draper in New York City from Max Bedacht in Frenchtown, NJ, Jan. 20, 1955. In this letter to historian Ted Draper, Communist Party leader Max Bedacht provides interesting impressionistic answers to a number of Draper's questions about the early American Communist movement.
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
16 September 2007: added to the Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:
To the publishers of De Nieuwe Fakkel and De Internationale [1938]
[Frans-Arne Stylegar]
16 September 2007: Added to the Shibdas Ghosh Internet Archive:
On the Steps taken by the CPSU against Stalin (November 16-18, 1961)
The Tenth Congress of The Communist Party of China (November 6, 1973)
[Thanks to SUCI, Salil Sen and Mike B.]
16 September 2007: Added to the new archive of
The Pierre Goldman Affair 1969-1979:
Introduction, by Mitch Abidor
A letter to the Court, from Pierre Goldman
The Affair Begins, from Les Temps Modernes, #352, Nov 1975
Pierre Goldman, (1944‗1979) was a left-wing French intellectual, who had visited Cuba and fought with guerillas in Venezuela, convicted of several robberies, including murders for which he always protested his innocence. He was assassinated apparently by the Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación.
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
15 September 2007: Added to the
Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, March 1921.
Proletarian Comment, April 1921.
Proletarian Comment, May 1921.
Proletarian Comment, June 1921.
At this point, Baracchi left Australia for Europe, where he later joined the Communist Party in Germany and became a member of the Executive Committee of the Communist International.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
15 September 2007: Added to the new
Mihailo Marković Archive:
Dialectical Theory of Meaning, (Abstract) 1961
Marx and Critical Scientific Thought, 1968
The Concept of Critique in Social Science, 1988
Marković was one of the first and fiercest critics of the Stalinist philosophical theses in Yugoslavia. His Revision of the Philosophical Bases of Marxism in the USSR, published in 1952, was the first major attack on the Stalinist philosophy in Yugoslavia. In the 1960-ties Marković became a prominent member of the Praxis group. Due to his critical observations, together with seven other professors from the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade, Marković was suspended in 1975, and finally lost his job in 1981.
In 1986 Marković was co-author of the notorious Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, a document that has formulated the central tenets of Serbian nationalism. From this year Marković was increasingly abandoning Marxism for nationalism.
[Thanks to Zdravko Saveski]
14 September 2007:Added to the Portuguese Temática Archive:
A Direção do Partido Comunista Iugoslavo Abandona a Teoria Marxista-Leninista das Classes e da Luta de Classes wrote by L. Lautu;
A Economia Polonesa Marcha Para o Socialismo wrote by Hilary Minc;
O Imperialismo Ianque e a Aviação Comercial Brasileira wrote by Miguel Almeida;
O Imperialismo Ianque Domina o Aparelho Estatal do Brasil wrote by Osvaldo Peralva;
O Plano Marshall - Recuperação ou Guerra? wrote by James S. Allen and
O Bolchevique Zhdánov, Um Exemplo a Seguir wrote by Rui Facó.
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
13 September 2007: Added to the Serbo-Croatian Praxis Archive:
Rasim Muminović - Utopicum kao indikacija krize humanuma (Utopicum as an Indication of the Crisis of the Humanum)
Rudolph Berlinger - Humanost i utopija - Ontologijska skica (Humanism and Utopia - An Ontological Sketch)
Dragan Stoianovici - Humane vrijednosti u Marxovoj koncepciji i nadilaženje utopije (Human values in Marx's Conception and the Supersession of Utopia)
[Thanks to A.M.]
14 September 2007: Added to the
George Padmore Archive:
The Voice of Coloured Labour, Speeches and Reports of Colonial Delegates to the World Trade Union Conference, 1945
The World Trade Union Conference was held at County Hall, London in February 1945, and was presided over by Mr. George Isaacs, Chairman of the British Trade Union Congress. Besides other illuminating material collected in this report of the conference, the discussions between various delegates to the conference from around the world about fascism, imperialism and Zionism still repay reading today.
[Thanks to Christian Hogsbjerg]
13 September 2007: Added to the
Communist Party of Great Britain Archive:
Report on the British Road to Socialism, 1957
George Matthews’ report on the Communist Party of Great Britain’s programme The British Road to Socialism, delivered at the XXV Congress of the C.P.G.B.—the first Party congress following Khrushchev’s revelations at the XX Congress of the C.P.S.U. Matthews highlights the modifications to the 1951 edition that came about because of events in the Soviet Union, but dismisses characterisations that the programme is is Revisionist or Reformist.
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
13 September 2007: Added to the Romanian Archive:
M. Andreeva. Lenin şi Gorki
K. E. Voroşilov.
Prima mea întîlnire cu Vladimir Ilici
K. T. Sverdlova. Aşa era Lenin
A. Şlihter. Prima cuvîntare a lui Ilici la un miting public în Rusia
Emelian Iaroslavski. Vladimir Ilici conduce activitatea de luptă a partidului
V. M. Smirnov. Întîlnirile mele cu Lenin în Finlanda
[Thanks to Liviu Iacob]
13 September 2007:
Added to the Portuguese Malatesta Archive:
Rumo à Anarquia, 1910
[Thanks to Cultura Brasileira and Fernando Araújo]
13 September, 2007: Added to the Shibdas Ghosh Internet Archive:
Some questions on the way the
Cuban Crisis had been solved (February 1, 1963)
[Thanks to SUCI, Salil Sen and Mike B.]
12 September 2007: Added to the
George Padmore Archive:
History of the Pan-African Congress, 1947
The Fifth Pan-African Congress was held in Chorlton Town Hall, Manchester, England from 15 - 21 October 1945, and it marked the historic moment when Pan-Africanism became an idea whose time had come. The Second World War had led to an almost universal feeling among Africans and people of African descent that colonial liberation was the order of the day, and this struggle would be achieved by force if necessary. The conference reflected the new militant leadership in Africa who would make the fine words of the Congress a reality, though delegates from French-speaking territories were absent. While the delegates included the likes of Kwame Nkrumah (future leader of Ghana), Jomo Kenyatta (future leader of Kenya) and Dr. Hastings Banda (Malawi), as the Pan-African Congress Chair, W.E.B. Du Bois, remembered, ‘George Padmore was the organising spirit of that congress.’ The Fifth Pan-African Congress, Du Bois insisted, made 1945 ‘a decisive year in determining the freedom of Africa’ and Padmore’s history of the congress ‘carries messages which must not die, but should be passed on to aid Mankind.’
[Thanks to Christian Hogsbjerg]
12 September 2007: Added to the Hal Draper Archive:
The Socialist View: Democracy is a Weapon!
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
11 September 2007: Added to the Serbo-Croatian Praxis Archive:
Milan Kangrga - Zbilja i utopija (Reality and Utopia)
[Thanks to A.M.]
11 September 2007: Added to the Serbo-Croatian Praxis Archive:
Karl-Heinz Volkmann-Schluck - Kako je ideja postala utopija (How Ideas Became Utopia)
[Thanks to A.M.]
11 September 2007: Added to the Serbo-Croatian Praxis Archive:
Paul Piccone - Utopija i stvarno prevladavanje otudenja (Utopia and the Real Supersession of Alienation)
[Thanks to A.M.]
11 September, 2007: Added to the Edgar Hardcastle
Archive:
Ireland, the Labour Party and the Empire,
An article published in the December 1921 issue of the Socialist Standard that analyzes the situation in Ireland at the time, particularly the policies of the Labour Party towards that country.
Fake Labour Government: The Puppet Show,
In this 1924 article, Hardcastle considers how the reformist Labour Party would behave if it came into power and contrasts that behavior with the position of revolutionary socialists.
The Class Struggle in Soviet Russia,
Ten years after the Russian Revolution, the author looks at the class divisions and conflict under the "worker's state" in Russia.
Trotsky States His Case, In this 1928 article, Hardcastle draws on Trotsky's The Real Situation in Russia published the previous year to consider the social and political situation in Russia.
How to Make Socialists: Lenin's View,
This short 1933 article points out that Lenin in What is to be Done? and elsewhere argued that the way to make socialists was not—as most Communists in the Thirties believed—to concentrate on "immediate demands."
Marxism and Russia, This 1933 article for Socialist Standard criticizes Barabara Wooton's views on Marxism and Russia (and the relationship between the two).
Hitler: A Warning to the Workers, In this 1933 article, the author looks at Hitler's rise to power, its implication for workers in Germany and elsewhere, and what lessons socialists can draw from it.
Hotheads and Hitlerism (Some Some Observations on Unity),
Hardcastle, in this 1933 article, advocates an "independent and uncompromising" socialist movement and warns against subordinating that movement to a "united front" against fascism that would include bourgeois and Stalinist parties.
[Thanks to M. Schauerte and the Socialist Party of Great Britain
11 September 2007: Added to the
Paris May 1968 Archive:
Unified Action of Students and Workers, Parti Socialiste Unifié.
The Struggle Continues, Jeunesse Communiste Revolutionnaire
11 September 2007: Added to the
French Revolution, Conspiracy of Equals, Archive:
Song of the Equals, Lyrics by Germain, 1796
[Translated by Greg Goodlander, edited by Mitch Abidor]
11 September 2007: Added to J. T. Murphy
Archive:
How a Mass Communist Party will Come in Britain
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
11 September 2007: Added to the International Socialism Archive (1958-1968):
C.L.R. James: Revolutionary Creativity (1964)
Nigel Harris: India – a First approximation II (1964)
John Charlton: Hughiology (1964) (book review)
Letter to Readers (1964) (editorial)
Labour – Advise or Dissent (1964) (editorial)
One Hundrred Years On (1964) (editorial)
USA – Crucial Juncture (1964) (editorial)
South Arabia (1964) (editorial)
Churchill – A Ruling-Class Militant (1964)
Laurens Otter: Letter from a Reader – On the New Left (1964)
Imre Nagy: Budapast 1956 – The Central workers Council (1964)
Tony Young: Uneasy Reconciliation (1964) (book review)
H. Mit: Poor Stuff (1964) (book review)
Farrago (1964) (book review)
Ioan Davies: Red and Black (1964) (book review)
David Breen: prejudice (1964) (book review)
Colin Barker: Middling Dull (1964) (book review)
Raymond Challinor: The Greatest Since Keir Hardy (1964) (book review)
John Charlton: Bombs and Boots (1964) (book review)
Chris Harman: Osagyefo Pensant (1964) (book review)
Nigel Harris: Stalin’s Boy (1964) (book review)
Nigel Harris: Quite Useful (1964) (book review)
Letter to Readers (1964) (editorial)
Labour’s Hundred Days (1964) (editorial)
Socialists and Labour (1964) (editorial)
Charles Leinenberger: USA – Victory Celebrations? (1964) (editorial)
Pat Jordan: From Our Readers – On The Week (1964)
A.L. Buick: From Our Readers – On the Labour Party (1964)
Jerry Lynch: From Our Readers – On Education and Class (1964)
Erich Gerlach: Karl Korsch’s Undogmatic Marxism (1964)
Chris Barnes: Knowledge Without Understanding (1964) (book review)
Chris Barnes: Voyage Into the Backyard (1964) (book review)
Bert Benson: Class Unconscious (1964) (book review)
David Breen: First Round (1964) (book review)
Roger Cox: Compensation (1964) (book review)
Ioan Davies: African Studies (1964) (book review)
Barry Hindess: The New Right (1964) (book review)
Barry Hindess: Old Game (1964) (book review)
Barry Hindess: Chit-Chat (1964) (book review)
Nick Howard: State Cap Primers (1964) (book review)
Colin Humphrey: Nobly Wrong (1964) (book review)
Richard Hyman: Shift Work (1964) (book review)
Constance Lever: Urban Crush (1964) (book review)
Gerry Lynch: Cops and Rebels (1964) (book review)
Alasdair MacIntyre: Violence and All That Jazz (1964) (book review)
P. Mansell: Radical Errors (1964) (book review)
H. Mit: Shooting Bishops (1964) (book review)
Jophn Palmer: Tripe (1964) (book review)
Dave Peers: Changing Men (1964) (book review)
H. Richards: Depressing History (1964) (book review)
Hilary Rose: High Tabulations (1964) (book review)
Stephen Rose: Such a Nice Man (1964) (book review)
Sarah Watson: Yawning Gap (1964) (book review)
Tony Young: Nice Maps (1964) (book review)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]
The complete contents of International Socialism (1st series), Nos.18 & 19, are now on-line.
11 September 2007: Added to the Hal Draper Archive:
The Death of the State in Marx and Engels (1970) (Exhaustive study of Marx and Engels’ attitude to the state)
The Principle of Self-Emancipation in Marx and Engels (1971) (Study of the Marx adn Engels’ understanding of the ‘self-emancipation of the working classes’)
Marx on Democratic Forms of Government (1970) (Study of Marx’s argument that popular sovereignty is an essential aspect of the revolutionary process)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]
11 September 2007: Added to the Ernest Mandel Archive:
Debate with Martin Nicolaus on US imperialism and the prospects for revolution in the USA:
Ernest Mandel: Where Is America Going? (1969)
Martin Nicolaus: The Universal Contradiction (1969)
Ernest Mandel: The Laws of Uneven Development (1969)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]
10 September 2007: Added to the
Harold R. Isaacs Writers Archive in the MIA’s History Section’s Encyclopedia of Trotskyism On-Line is Isaacs’ monunmental history of the Second Chinese Revolution: The Tragedy of the Chinese Revolution 1925-1927. One of the only books ever written in English on this revolution, this book is well anotated, with over 1,000 footnotes. Isaacs was a reporter for the Daily Worker (NY) and was eyewitness to the Revolution, seeing first hand the failure of the Communist International’s attempt to subordinate the Chinese Communist Party to the Kuomintang nationalist party of Chiang Kai-shek. This version is very special because it is a transcripion of the rare, first, non-copyrighted and unrevised version that Isaacs published in 1938 before he abandoned Marxism. The writing contains his analysis as well as his narration of the events that lead to the revolution and its subsequent defeat.
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren and David Walters].
10 September 2007: Added to Slovenian Language section of the MIA:
Marx - Predgovor h kritiki politic(ne ekonomije: prispevek (Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy)
[Thanks to A.M.]
10 September 2007: Added to the new CLR James Archive:
Six Questions to Trotskyists – And Their Answers
Controversy, February-March 1938
[Thanks to Christian Hogsbjerg]
10 September 2007: Added to the Portuguese Marighella Archive:
Nossa Política,
Editorial da Revista Problemas nº 13, 1948
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
10 September 2007: Added to the Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, January 1921.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
10 September 2007: Added to the new
George Orwell Archive:
The Socialist Attitude to the Invasion of the U.S.S.R., September 1939
Answers to a Questionnaire on the War, November 1941
[Thanks to Christian Hogsbjerg]
10 September 2007: Added to J. T. Murphy Archive and The Communist Index [Newspaper of the Communist Party of Great Britain]:
Stand by the Boilermakers
American Coal War
Trade Union Congress
Viscount Milner’s Dilema
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
September 9, 2007: To the Swedish Reference Archive was added:
The Kronstadt Uprising of 1921, Ida Mett, 1938
plus: an appendix with articles from Isvestija.
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
9 September 2007: Added to the Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, November 1920.
Proletarian Comment, December
1920.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
8 September 2007: Added to the Praxis Archive:
Why Praxis? – Editorial in first issue.
[Translated by Zdravko Saveski]
7 September 2007: Added to the Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, October 1920.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
6 September 2007: Added to the Portuguese Temática Archive:
O Terceiro
Partido e as Eleições de 1948 wrote by Eugene Dennis;
O Movimento Agrário
nas Filipinas wrote by Harlan R. Crippen;
Karl Liebknecht e Rosa Luxemburgo, Internacionalistas de
Ação wrote by K. Funk;
O Capitalismo Monopolista de Estado wrote by I. Kouzminov and
Um Exemplo do Internacionalismo Proletário wrote by Redação Revista Problemas
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]
6 September 2007: Added to the Portuguese Dutt Archive:
Reforcemos a Luta Pela Paz
[Thanks
to Fernando Araújo]
6 September 2007: Added to the
Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, August 1920.
Proletarian Comment, September 1920.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
5 September 2007: Added to the J. V. Stalin:
The General Strike, 1926
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
5 September 2007: Added to the Shibdas Ghosh Internet Archive:
Cultural Revolution of China (October 27, 1967)
[Thanks to SUCI, Salil Sen and Mike B.]
5 September, 2007: Added to the Jack Fitzgerald Archive:
These be your gods, O Israel!, This 1906 article, published soon after the formation of the Socialist Party of Great Britain (SPGB), looks back at the development of the Liberal Party in the 19th century.
Labour Leaders and Their Prey, In this 1909 article for the Socialist Standard, one of the founders of the SPGB criticizes the policies of the Labour Party as expressed at its conference held in Portsmouth that year.
Review of The Tyranny of Usury A review published in 1909 of a book by John MacLachlan, an apparent supporter of the I.L.P. Fitzgerald criticizes the author?s attempt to pin all of the blame for problems on usury rather than the capitalist system itself.
The
Fiftieth Trade Union Conference, Fitzgerald takes a look at the state of the trade union movement, and its bureaucracy, by examining the Trade Union Conference in 1918.
Gyrations at GalsgieThis 1919 article, published in Socialist Standard, examines the Trades Union Congress, held in Glasgow that year, which gathered together trade union officials through Great Britain.
[Thanks to M. Schauerte and the Socialist Party of Great Britain
5 September 2007:
Added to the Romanian Archive:
N. A. Emelianov. În ultimele zile de ilegalitate
G. E. Ialava. «Fochistul» de pe locomotiva nr. 293
L. P. Parviainen. În satul Ialkala în toamna anului 1917
M. Fofanova. Ilici înainte de octombrie 1917
I. Eremeev. Membrii gărzilor roşii la Smolnîi, de vorbă cu Lenin
V. Bonci-Bruevici. Cum a scris Vladimir Ilici decretul asupra pămîntului
A. V. Lunacearski. Smolnîi în noaptea de neuitat
A. V. Lunacearski. Amintiri din octombrie
[Thanks to Liviu Iacob]
5 September, 2007: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the following 12 original documents from the history of early American Marxism.
Conscientious Objectors by Louis C. Fraina [circa May 1917] In addition to being one of the most important ideologists of the nascent American Communist movement, Louis C. Fraina was a leading member of the resistance movement to conscription, as this signed (!!!) wartime leaflet published by the "League of Conscientious Objectors" in New York testifies.
Letter to the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, from Anna Louise Strong in Seattle, Dec. 14, 1917. Seattle School Board member Anna Louise Strong boldly and aggressively writes to the Department of Justice in protest of the attempt of its agents to use slander and insinuation to cause those they distrust to be terminated from their jobs.
Report of Treatment of Conscientious Objectors at the Camp Funston [Kansas] Guard House by David Eichel, et al. [events of Sept. 5 to Oct. 21, 1918] There are some in the Washington political elite who claim that the abuses and crimes of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo were "aberations" by "rogue" members of the military.
Statement of Ludwig C.A.K. Martens on the Activities of the Soviet Mission: Moscow -- Feb. 24, 1921. Upon arriving back in Moscow after being forced to leave the United States, former Russian emissary Ludwig Martens summarized the activities of the Russian Soviet Government Bureau which he headed in the Soviet press.
Hail the First of May. [leaflet of the United Toilers of America] [c. April 25, 1922] This is the text of a rare leaflet of the "Legal Political Organization" subsidiary of the Central Caucus-CPA Opposition!
Minutes of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America: New York, April 3-27, 1922. The governing Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America met an unprecedented 12 times in the month of April 1922.
Minutes of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America: New York, May 29 to June 1, 1922. A full session of the CEC of the CPA met daily in New York City from May 29 to June 1, 1922.
Railroad Men! Act Against the Traitors to Labor. [United Toilers of America] [July 31, 1922] In addition to its English and Russian official organs, the United Toilers of America, "Legal Political Organization" of the Central Caucus-CPA Opposition, issued targeted newspapers in support of the strikes of the Railroad Shopmen and Miners in the summer of 1922.
Minutes of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America, New York, January 1922. ***Third edition, based upon a fundamentally different version of the minutes published in The Communist, with insertions of omitted material from archival summary minutes.***
Minutes of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America, New York, Feb. 10-22, 1922 ***Substantially modified file -- adds one missed page of content, adds several pseudonym IDs, removes one false ID, standardizes format, alters typography.***
Minutes of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America, New York, March 8-31, 1922 " ***Substantially modified file -- adds several pseudonym IDs, standardizes format, alters typography.*** Minutes of the governing CEC of the underground CPA for the month of March 1922.
List of 1922 meetings of the National Executive Committee of the Young Workers League of America Includes specific archival citations in the Comintern Archive for meeting minutes of each of the 18 sessions held in 1922.
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
5 September 2007: Added to the William Z. Foster Archive:
The Crisis on the Railroads
The Principles and Program of the Trade Union Educational League
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
5 September, 2007: Added to the Sen Katayama Archive:
Japan and Soviet Russia, 1919
The Communist International & the Far East, 1924
[Thanks to Ted Crawford]
3 September, 2007: Added to the Chinese Communism Subject Archive:
Position of the Chinese Communists on Sian Incidents:
Three Documents of the Chinese Communist Party (1936-1937)
[Thanks to Mike B.]
3 September, 2007: Added to the Shibdas Ghosh Internet Archive:
An Appeal to the Leaders of the International Communist Movement (September 1, 1963)
[Thanks to SUCI, Salil Sen and Mike B.]
3 September 2007: Added to the John Gollan Archive:
Twenty-Fifth Congress of the Communist Party of Great Britain: Political Report
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
3 September 2007: Added to the
Guido Baracchi Archive:
Proletarian Comment, July 1920.
[Thanks to Chris Clayton]
3 September, 2007: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the following 17 original documents from the history of early American Marxism.
War’s Heretics: A Plea for the Conscientious Objector, by Norman M. Thomas [Aug. 1917] In this pamphlet of the Civil Liberties Bureau of the American Union Against Militarism (forerunner of the ACLU) Rev. Norman Thomas of New York makes a case for the conscientious objectors of America.
Circular Letter to Michigan Locals and Branches of the Socialist Party of America from Adolph Germer, Executive Secretary. [June 3, 1919] With this letter, Executive Secretary of the Socialist Party Adolph Germer notified the primary party organizations of state of Michigan of their having been expelled from the SPA by the governing National Executive Committee on May 24 for actions measures adopted at the state party convention.
Letter to Adolph Germer in Chicago, from Ludwig Katterfeld in Dighton, Kansas. [June 10, 1919]In this brief communication, Socialist Party NEC member L.E. Katterfeld requests Executive Secretary Adolph Germer—a factional foe —to poll the newly elected members of the NEC with a view to their holding an organizational meeting on July 1, 1919, the first day of their term of office under the party constitution.
Letter to Ludwig Katterfeld in Dighton, KS from Adolph Germer in Chicago. [June 17, 1919]Socialist Party Executive Secretary Adolph Germer responds in no uncertain terms to Ludwig Katterfeld’s attempt to convene a meeting of the disputed “new” National Executive Committee of the SPA: “With reference to your motion to call a meeting of the new National Executive Committee on July 1st [1919], let me say that I cannot submit this constitutionally or otherwise.
Circular Letter to the National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party of America from Adolph Germer, Executive Secretary. [June 21, 1919] This short letter from the Executive Secretary of the Socialist Party of America to the sitting members of the National Executive Committee (whose terms were constitutionally set to expire on June 30, 1919) passes along the content of a telegram from Left Wing NEC members Ludwig Katterfeld and Alfred Wagenknecht to the Socialist Party of Massachusetts charging the NEC with “flagrant procedure and violation of the party constitution” in excluding “40,000 members of our party.”
Letter to Marion Sproule, State Secretary of the Socialist Party of Massachusetts from Adolph Germer, Executive Secretary of the Socialist Party of America. [June 25, 1919] In this letter to the State Secretary of the Socialist Party of Massachusetts, SP Executive Secretary Adolph Germer passes along news of the expulsion of the Massachusetts Party by the National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party in a vote of 8 to 1.
Letter to C.E. Ruthenberg in New York from Marion E. Sproule in Boston. [Feb. 4, 1920]Although exceedingly short, this note from Massachusetts CPA State Secretary Marion Sproule to Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg adds a bit of esoteric detail to our understanding of the structure of the underground CPA.
Letter to C.E. Ruthenberg in New York from I.E. Ferguson in Chicago. [April 11, 1920] This letter to Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg from his friend and factional ally, I.E. “Ed” Ferguson, demonstrates that Ruthenberg’s decision to split from the organization was not a hasty action taken in response to a refusal of Federationist elements to unite with the anglophonic Communist Labor Party (as Draper and his followers would have it ), but rather was the result of a whole complex of factors.
Financial Report, Soviet Russia Medical Relief Committee, Western District, by Charles L. Drake [Jan. 15, 1921]This report by Director Charles Drake closes the book on the 4-1/2 month tenure of the Chicago office of the Soviet Russia Medical Relief Committee.
Minutes of the First Session of the Founding Convention of the Workers Party of America: New York—Dec. 23, 1921. This terse record of the first day of the founding convention of the WPA is useful for its reckoning of the delegate strength of the various constituent organizations.
Letter to Clarissa Cris” Ware from Jay Lovestone.” [date undetermined, 1923] This letter was extensively quoted in Ted Morgan’s biography of Jay Lovestone, a glimpse at a little soap opera inside Workers Party Headquarters.
Letter to Ella Wolfe in Mexico from Jay Lovestone in Chicago. [Jan. 8, 1923] One of many surviving letters from Jay Lovestone to and from the beautiful wife of his factional ally, Bert Wolfe, a man who had boldly fled the anti-Communist repression of 1919-20 in New York for an assumed identity in San Francisco and thence to Mexico, all without party permission.
Speech to the American Commission of the Communist International, by William Z. Foster [May 6, 1924]In this speech to the American Commission of ECCI, Bill Foster replies to charges levied by his arch-nemesis, the Hungarian Communist leader John Pepper.
Defend the Civil Rights of Communists, by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn [Dec. 1939] CPUSA leader Elizabeth Gurley Flynn makes an appeal for the defense of the Communist Party against a new offensive by the government during the first days of the second great European war.
Letter to Theodore Draper in New York from Cyril Briggs in Los Angeles. (extract) [March 17, 1958]This is a fascinating first-hand account of the origins and development of the African Blood Brotherhood by its founder and leading force, Cyril Briggs.
List of 1921 meetings of the Central Executive Committee of the old CPA. Includes specific archival citations for meeting minutes of each session in the Comintern Archive (f. 515, op. 1).
List of 1921 meetings of the Central Executive Committee of the unified CPA. Includes specific archival citations for meeting minutes of each session in the Comintern Archive (f. 515, op. 1).
List of 1922 meetings of the Central Executive Committee, Polcom, and Orcom of the CPA. Includes specific archival citations for meeting minutes of each session in the Comintern Archive and as well as in the Draper Papers at the Hoover Institution Archive, Stanford University.
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
2 September 2007: Added to the
Paris, May 1968 Archive:
The Sorbonne Is Open Round the Clock to Workers, University of Paris Occupation and Administration Committees
Trotskyist Unity by Alain Krivine, Pierre Frank, G. Kaldy, May 19
No to Police Power! by March 22 movement
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
2 September, 2007: To the Swedish Kollontaj Archive was added:
Workers’ Opposition, Alexandra Kollontai, 1921
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
2 September, 2007: To the Swedish Kautsky Archive was added:
The Class Struggle (Erfurt Program), Karl Kautsky, 1892/1904
The Social Revolution and on the
day After the Social Revolution, Karl Kautsky, 1902
Ethics and the Materialist Conception of History, Karl Kautsky, 1906
The Road to Power, Karl Kautsky, 1909
Democracy or Dictatorship, Karl Kautsky, 1918
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
1 September, 2007: To the Swedish
Gorter Archive was added:
The World Revolution, Herman Gorter, 1918
[Thanks to Jonas
Holmgren]
1 September 2007: Added to the J. T. Murphy
Archive:
Modern Trade Unionism: A Study of the present tendencies and the future of Trade Unions in Britain
[Thanks to Brian Reid]
1 September, 2007: To the Swedish Reference Archive was added:
Soviet Marxism: A Critical Analysis, Herbert Marcuse, 1958
Repressive
Tolerance, Herbert Marcuse, 1965
An Essay on Liberation, Herbert Marcuse, 1969
The
aesthetic dimension. Toward a critique of marxist aesthetics, Herbert Marcuse, 1978
etc. [Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
1 September 2007: Added to the
Australian History Section, Victorian Labor College:
Victorian Labor College Syllabus, 1955.
[Thanks to Kevin Goins]
1 September, 2007: To the Swedish Lenin Archive was added:
Marxism and Insurrection, V.I. Lenin, 1917
The Bolsheviks Must Assume State Power, V.I. Lenin,
1917
One of the Fundamental Questions Of The Revolution , V.I. Lenin, 1917
Advice of an
Onlooker, V.I. Lenin, 1917
The Tasks of the Revolution, V.I. Lenin, 1917
Letter to
Comrades, V.I. Lenin, 1917
The Crisis Has Matured, V.I. Lenin, 1917
Meeting of the Petrograd
Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies, V.I. Lenin, 1917
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
Archived “What’s New” Archives: